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University of Southern California
DAILY
TROJAN
Vol. LV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 18,1963
NO. 20
City Council Delays Hearing Close Hoover Boulevard
Art Buchwald Will Address Convocation
WON'T STOP—Dr. Ewing C. Scott, member of the department of chemistry, refuses to abide by the theory that a man must retire at 65. "I will continue to teach as long as I can," says the 69-year-old chemist.
Chemist Raps Idea Of Retiring at 65
EVA GUSTAVSON
. Norwegian soloist
Nationally syndicated columnist Art Buchwald will speak at an all-university convocation Tuesday at 10 a.m. in Bovard Auditorium.
Buchwald, who attended USC in 194S, is now a New York Herald Tribune columnist syndicated in 180 newspapers.
He made his name famous as a humorous writer in Paris, where for 14 years he wrote satire articles about world personalities and worked as a correspondent for “For me, my work is my these one-year academic Variety, home,” claims Dr. Ewing C. stands is the moving, which Buchwald moved to Wash-Scott, 69-year-old member of^is hard on Mrs. Scott,” Dr. ington, D.C., last year, and the department of chemistry. Scott admitted. his popularity has increased
when explaining his 40-year “She puts down our roots to where many now consider career as an inorganic chem- wherever we go,” Dr. Scott!him the nation’s number one
ist. : explained. “Each time we humor columnist j The University Symphony
Dr. Scott, veteran of seven move the roots come up again While at LSC, Buchwald Orchestra will open a new colleges and universities, of- and the aching lasts about wrote for the now^ extinct season jn j^s symphonic and
choral series this Sunday evening at 8:30 in Bovard Auditorium.
General admission for the concert will be $2. Students will be admitted for half price and may buy their tickets at the door.
Grad Student Gives Views In Magazine
The various meanings
Signals to Serve Immediate Needs
The Los Angeles City Council yesterday voted to delay its hearing on the proposed closing off of Hoover Boulevard pending a study by the city engineer on the rerouting of diverted traffic.
However, two traffic lights will be installed on
ANTHONY VAZZANA
. . . first symphony
MusicaletoOpen Symphony Year
which have been ascribed to Hoover Boulevard as an in-the concept of religion are terim measure, discussed in an article by a, Dr. Carl Franklin, vice-recent USC Law School grad- president in charge of finan-uate in the current issue of cial affairs, said the council the Southern California Law voted 8 to 5 to wait to dis-Review, published this week, j cuss closure until the city en-Ferdinand F. Fernandez gineers had submitted a de-suggests in his article a defi- finite plan for traffic diver-nition which is intended to sion. guarantee a liberal view Introduced j The School of Engineering
without including beliefs The motion was intro- jwiU hold its annual institute which are not religious m any duced by Councilman E. L. for high teachers of
proper sense. Timberlake almost immedi- engineering and related sub-
In the same issue of the,ately and the actual closing -ject3 at q.qo a m ;n iot vh publication the recently en- of the street was not dis-j3^
acted California obscenity cussed.” Dr. Franklin said. -.h . ?.
, . ., m. , • . , with a social gathering fol-
statute is examined in the The continuance was voted lowe<j by a w;icoma * thg
Engineers Will Speak To Teachers
light of two questions: When inspite of a strong plea by
I university at 9:30 a.m. by
ficially retired from Syracuse s*x months. By then, she has humor magazine, Wampus,
University in 1959, but has:new roots and the process
held four teaching jobs since. £oes on to repeat itself.”
“Arbitrary retirement rules Mrs‘ ^ott is a professional
are polite, but still very arbi- w|th a masters degree
trary ways of saying a man m thf c,ass>cus from the Un1’
is no longer functioning prop- v ersiti ° 0 lca£0, erly>.. -U__Kansas Study
said the chemist.
Rules Fail
“The rules fail to take into account the fact that how
and did a column on campus politics and other affairs for the Daily Trojan under the byline of Howard Lindhoffer.
“It seemed the safest way to do the kind of material I was doing.” he said. “If anyone was going to be hung in effigy, it wasn't going to be Buchwald.”
He also wrote the book for USC's 1948 varsity show entitled “No Love Atoll.”
All 10 a.m. classes will be
The evening's program will
Dr. Scott studied at +he
University of Kansas from
1912 to 1914, then completed
his AB degree requirements well a man functions these at stanford in 1916
days is no longer necessarily He was at the University
relative to the age of 65, he of California in Berkeley as
explained. a graduate student and grad-; dismissed Tuesday.
“In my case, I am in good Uate assistant. After Berke-health; I hate inactivity; I ley he spent nine months in love teaching and teachers of the army during World War I inorganic chemistry are need-1 After he recovered from an #
ed. I shall continue to teach attack of typhoid, he accept- ^ ^ | ^ p 4-
as long as I can. It's become; ed, the suggestion of his mis- I IO I I w I IJ Q I Q I II w
a sort of personal crusade sionary uncle and took a
against the system, Dr. Scott chemical position in the pre- USC students in the root-] Each day begins with a de-
is a book “obscene?” and Dr. Franklin that the City:p. .__, „ T____ „ ,
, , . n . . >i , ^ I. .i Ur. Alfred L. Ins^BrsolI, d63.ii
when is a book-seller crimm- Council act favorably on the . , h , f
Following the overture will ally liable for selling an “ob- previous recommendations of . 8111 e .
be the premier performance scene” book? the City Council traffic and ^he program will also in-
of a new symphony by Anth- Jn thg “Summary Jud<y_ planning committee that
ony Vazzana, member of the mpnt<, °
USC Music School faculty.
The symphony is \Tazzana’s
first.
Vazzana has taught music theory at USC since 1959. This symphony was written as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Musical
begin with a performance of Arts. He earned his bachelors Richard Wagner’s “A Faust Overture.” The overture will be presented in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of Wagner’s birth.
Troy Camp to Ask
Contestants Must File
added.
Following h i s retirement Dr. Scott accepted a Fulbright grant to teach in Tunghai University in Taiwan. His work there was so successful that the grant was extended for a rarely-offered second year.
Year in Tokyo
After Taiwan, the chemist spent a year at the International Christian University in
medical school of Peking Un- section at the Coliseum votional service and ends
degree in music education from the State University of New York and received his masters degree in music composition from USC in 1948.
Soloist I ,a I • •
The soloist for the evening PPl!C3llOnS will be the Norwegian con- * ' tralto Eva Gustavson. She will perform Ernest Chaus-son’s “Poem of Love and the Sea.”
elude lectures on “Astron-
o^ti'rvn nf tho mao-o Hoover Boulevard be closed: om3' with Microwaves, by section of the ma0a-j immediatplv ^r- Willard V. Rusch, assist-
zine, Gov. Ross Barnett of t . ant nrofessor of the denart-
oire o We asked the street bej1 Proressor 01 tne depart
Mississippi airs a Southern- as soon as nossible be- ment of electrical engineer-
er s views on the pending fed- closed s°on as be “Simulation of Physical
or.a] ot1h cause of the extreme hazard in&’ oimuiauon or rnvsicai
to students who have to cross! Systems by Electronic Com-
lation. His commentary is hrmWard in ppttinp- tn puters,” by Dr. Robert B.
followed by an analysis of b°l e a J.pro- McGhee, instructor in elec-
the issues involved by Prof. „ ° universitv p o en°ineerin? and rn-di-
Leonard P-atner of the School Dr F™kl“ ^ ^tor of JsCSvst^m ^
I «-We now have 1500 stud- rector ot UbC bystems bim-
--J-ients who have to cross the u^ion Laboratory; and
street several times a day.” j Some Foreign Explorations ; Dr. Franklin said both he for Natural Resources,” by and several councilmen in-; ^r*. George V. Chilingar. as-sisted that the lives of stud- sociate professor of petro-ents cannot be measured; ^eum engineering, against the slight inconveni- Dean Ingersoll will act as ence to drivers of vehicles moderator at the lectures, who may be delayed in get- In addition to this insti-All Helen of Troy applica- ting home or to an athletic tute. the 4th annual Engi-tions plus a S2 entry fee must events at the Coliseum. neering Recruitment Seminar
Unanimous Vote will be held Monday at noon
The City Council voted in Olin Hall’s Auditorium.
The event, in which career
be turned in by 3 p.m. today to the Special Events Office,
232 SL. Bill Nardi, queen con- unanimously to order the city;
1 un “*& _________ “*• _____________ _________ _______ ____ _____ Miss Gustavson. currently ( _________ _ ____________
ion Medical College in China* footbalV gam7 tomorrow^ will j wit^hT campfire with songs on the faculty of the USC test chairman, announced yes-'’ engineer to install two traffic opportunities for graduating Completes Work he asked to contribute funds and story-telling. School of Music, is the ter aj. lights to reduce this hazard senjors be discussed, is
Five years later the chem- so that an extra session of Interest of the USC Troy dauShter of a violinist and Eligible junior and senior somewhat. sponsored by student and
ist returned to the United Troy Camp can be held next Camp staff in their young orchestra conductor. She was women must have attended “I thanked the Council for professi0nal honor societies.
! guests does not end with the close of camp each year. All campers are invited to a home football game in the fall, are taken on tours of the
States and completed work summer.
toward a PhD at the Univer- Troy Camp co-chairmen sity of Chicago. Delphine Miller and Dan
Dr. Scott’s next stop was Stewart have also announced Sweet Briar College, where that 1963 Trojan Football
he taught organic chemistry Pressbooks will still be on USC campus and the nearby from 1927-1944. In 1944 he sale all next week in front of museums and are shown mo-went to Washington to do the Student Union to help fi-1 tion pictures of themselves Tokyo and another year on war work. A year later he nance an extra one-week ses- j taken during their session, the faculty of the University took a position at Syracuse sion of the camp for de-of Hawaii. University. serving Los Angeles area
Since his retirement. Dr. During his years at Syra- youngsters this summer.
Scott has usually been en- cuse he took a sabbatical in, Troy Camp is scheduled to 1- \ A/
gaged for one-year assign- Brazil to write a textbook. open Aug. 25th at Camp TO X W 0171011 ments. Every February he “If one is to write a text- Buckhorn near Idyllwild, sends out 40 to 50 job in- book, why not write it in an Calif., to accommodate 120 \A/ j 11 quiries. Each time he receives interesting place?” he laugh- youngsters between the ages 1,1 I
a large enough variety of of- ed. of 8-12. This is one of the
New Center
fers to enable him to pick Scott’s second text and choose. published by Harper’s
“The largest drawback in spring.
The start of a non-profit
that
carried 12 or more units with' Franklin said, at least six units of those Orginally it was believed •
IBM district coordinator of
year they must have; closing^off ^ the street.” Dr. jrecruiting speaking on “Opportunity in Sales Engineering.” Frank Nance, senior
; that the traffic from Hoover
trained for the ballet, but it USC for at least one year the interim measure, but; Speakers for the dav wilI was not until her early teens and have maintained a 2.5 made it clear that it fell far indude Harley A Thronson that her singing ability be- grade-point average. During short of the objective of came apparent.
Miss Gustavson’s first formal training in singing came after she received the largest annual scholarship ever granted in Oslo. She attended the Stockholm Opera School.
Miss Gustavson voice is 75 percent of performance.
Great Ability
taken in the daytime. j “lctLi LX1C LlttAAU' engineer instructor for Lit-
Contestants will be notified Boulevard would be diverted t Industries discussing of their eligibility prior to ; down Tco^ of
Overseas Employment,” and
commercial vehicles
the first judging Tuesday, j only
“Like the rest of homecom- would be permitted in the be|ley5S mg this year, the Helen of closed area.
contest will undergo The orginal request went
Lee Burnside, superintendent
° ----* — ’ — ------- —1 _ of testing laboratories. De-
Troy contest will undergo The orginal request went partment of Water and pow.
certain changes.” Nardi said, to the City Council traffic er talking on “Is Security
In an attempt to speed up a n d planning committees Limiteci by Security?”
“However, one must also judging for the event, the where it was considered in a —---
have great ability in learning women will be listed by num- joint session. * ■ • ■ ■
languages and acting. I found bers instead of by names. Although the proposal was AlUmni CJ U D
my dancing very handy,” she ~ * •” * ... I . • ....
Von Hofe Concludes Vienna Negotiations
was largest groups ever scheduled, , .
last in the 13-year history of the educational organization one-week summer program, geared to the needs of women
— i ^ , , , r. was announced yesterday by
Staffed, managed and fi-L, ,, „ .. .
, iTor1 t h t th Mrs. Walter H. Wolf, wife of nanced by bbt students, tne,^^ assigtant professor of to appear throughout the gov- the old standards of beauty, j recommendations. : meetine at 9 tomorrow at the
1 ernment-sponsored opera sea- poise, personality and appear- The question went again to
said.
In 1961, Miss Gustavson was invited to return to her native country as a guest star
names.
Judges will not know their approved unanimously by the names until the 15 finalists council committees, there \A/||I Mppi have been selected. were legal questions which * ”
Prospective Helens, how- had to be resolved and it then
ever, will still be judged by i went to the city attorney for . "^!e ^3S°^jaf^ ^
' ni Clubs will hold an annual
camp accommodates boys and;
girls who have never had the pharmacy-opportunity to go summer The organization, called camping. Everywoman's Village, is be-
Dr. Harold von Hofe. chair- students. Dr. Strelka will be The youngsters are careful- in? established primarily to man of the department of on the USC campus in the ^ screened to select the most Pr^^e a^ new creative outlet
German, announced at the spring semester of 1964 as a deserving. Half of the group ^ ^°m£n' Mrs, Wolf’c"ho Faculty Senate meeting Visiting Associate Professor is selected by the East Side ^ teach ^French and pan-
Wednesday that he has com- of German. At that time he
*ance, Nardi added.
(Continued on Pa?e 2)
pleted negotiations between will meet with interested stu-
USC and the University of dents and give them a pre-
Vienna to establish an aca- liminary briefing.
demic program for Trojans in ™ • . .
assist in preparing stu-
lls na' , dents. USC is offering an in-
The program, which will tensive German program dur-begin in the fall of 1964, will jng 1954 summer session, differ from any now existent «.At least two semesters be-because tne students will at- vond ^jie regUiar sequence of tend classes actually taught lower-division language in-by the professors of the uni- struction will be necessary \er?it\ ana not American for most students to acquire counterparts of these courses,'the fluency demanded.” Dr. Dr. \ on Hofe said. Von Hofe said.
This will provide the American student with a broader Opportunities for study at
Problems of 4-Course Plan Can Be Solved, Robb Says
YWCA.
Main topic on the agenda will be speeches by Conrad Wedberg. director of admissions, and four university vice presidents. The speakers will tell alumni club leaders about new developments in various phases of university activity.
The various club leaders
Boy’s Club and the others said that the education come from elementary schools have the “quality of a in the USC neighborhood. college course with the inf or-1
The fun-filled week for the mality of a gathering of The growing pains plaguing able the students to go more the astronomy department, young campers includes such friends ” the new four course plan of deeply into a few classes and said the overcrowding also hoId a discussion of past
activities as swimming and Twenty-seven courses will the College of Letters, Arts thereby derive more from the comes because it is impossible and future alumni club prowater safety instruction, arts be offered, covering a variety and Sciences may be ironed course. for professors to judge the grams. Business matters and and crafts horseback riding. subjects including ceram- out with the addition of more The main flaw in the plan. sizes of their classes accu‘ election of officers will con-
sports and games, hiking and ics- drama- languages and faculty and more widespread according to the students, is under the Plan'
nature study. fashion design. The courses |understanding of the plan by ^ overcrowded conditions Jn “Teachers assume that be-
will be open to all women no students, Dr. Wesley B°bbMSome 0f the lower division cailse the courses are now .matter what previous educa- professor of Religion and:ciasses £>r Robb said four units- there be less
ition thev have had, Mrs. Wolf LAS associate dean, said yes- „ ' ' \ . students interested who can
explained. terday. Students sa.d the lack of m ,nto the!r program But it
The cost of the course will Speaking at a student-fac- <“nmlS l"ns “ e “me is almost impossibie as yet to
DKA Film Will Screen
be nominal with most classes ulty discussion of the pros
course forced the condition and this detracted from the
stitute part of the meeting.
Top Moslem Will Speak
estimate how much smaller Mohammed Alsabery, coun-“Rififi,” the film story ot bein§ offered at SI.00 per and cons of the new plan, Dr. rtlIU “‘ia L11^ the classes will be,” he said. cji chairman of the Moslem
contact with the”actual”edu- the University of Vienna are a carefully planned, shrewdly hour Classes will begin on Robb said the plan is in its J?®1 1 1 y ° |^ing in 0 ep One of the major defects in Association of America in rational nossihilities of a for- exceptional in such fields as PYpr„tPd ipwpI rnhhprv will October 28. early transitional stages and ' the plan as it stands now. Los Angeles, will discuss hia
eign country, he pointed .vit. the dramatic arts, fine arts. be shown tonight at 8 in 133 A Welcome Xight will be cannot be judged yet. I “We expect some of the students held, is the lack of organization Sunday after-
Dr Yon Hofe also stressed music’ comparative literature,|by tllse D”jla Kappa Al- held Oct. 21 at 8 p.m. in the “We are still at the experi- overcrowding to be alleviated elective possibilities open to n0on at 4 at the Intemation-the fact that the cultural op- German literature, Slavic! ha film series * Van Nuvs Junior High School mental stage and the plan has by the addition of more fac- entering students. al Students House,
portunities in Vienna are un-!studies’ international rela- The movie will star Jean Auditorium. All who are in-not reached the level that ulty members as the plan “it used to be possible to | Alsabery will answer ques-limited He said that the stu- tions and European history, Servais Carl Mohner and terested in this program will was intended,” he said. progresses,” Dr. Robb said get a look at several fields tions posed about the Mos-
dents and faculty seem to he Pointed out- juies Dassin. Single admis-be able to learn more about I The philosophy behind the “It will also be helped, juat through taking electives lem religion,
have much leisure time. Be- Vienna itself also offers sion is 50 cents. it then, she said. new plan, according to Dr. j when the students realize Gf two or three units. Now; Steve Kent, president of the
cause of this, they are able rich and varied cultural op- Next F r i d a y s film is Speakers will be writer and Robb, was to provide students that under t e new p an re- that is impossible because it student council on religion, to have long informal discus- portunities. Arrangements “Love in the Afternoon,” a lecturer William S. Kroger, with courses that would go quirements can be spread out is so hard to fit a four-unit said the meeting is being held sions with each other. have been made to enable sophisticated comedy directed M.D.; Carolyn Heine of the into depth instead of only and do not have to be taken elective into the program because a large number of
Professor Joseph Strelka of USC students to attend the- by Billy Wilder. Audrey Hep- USC L#w School and psychi- scratching the surface of the a certain time, as in the once the requirements have students have latelv express-Vienna is to be the liaison of- aters and concerts at reduced burn, Maurice Chevalier and atrist Margaret L. McClean, various subjects. old sjctem. been satisfied,’ one student ‘ed interest in the Islam re-
ficer and counselor for USC. prices. ^Gary Cooper will star. |M.D. I Fewer courses would en-| Dr. John Russell, head of commented. »ligioru

University of Southern California
DAILY
TROJAN
Vol. LV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 18,1963
NO. 20
City Council Delays Hearing Close Hoover Boulevard
Art Buchwald Will Address Convocation
WON'T STOP—Dr. Ewing C. Scott, member of the department of chemistry, refuses to abide by the theory that a man must retire at 65. "I will continue to teach as long as I can," says the 69-year-old chemist.
Chemist Raps Idea Of Retiring at 65
EVA GUSTAVSON
. Norwegian soloist
Nationally syndicated columnist Art Buchwald will speak at an all-university convocation Tuesday at 10 a.m. in Bovard Auditorium.
Buchwald, who attended USC in 194S, is now a New York Herald Tribune columnist syndicated in 180 newspapers.
He made his name famous as a humorous writer in Paris, where for 14 years he wrote satire articles about world personalities and worked as a correspondent for “For me, my work is my these one-year academic Variety, home,” claims Dr. Ewing C. stands is the moving, which Buchwald moved to Wash-Scott, 69-year-old member of^is hard on Mrs. Scott,” Dr. ington, D.C., last year, and the department of chemistry. Scott admitted. his popularity has increased
when explaining his 40-year “She puts down our roots to where many now consider career as an inorganic chem- wherever we go,” Dr. Scott!him the nation’s number one
ist. : explained. “Each time we humor columnist j The University Symphony
Dr. Scott, veteran of seven move the roots come up again While at LSC, Buchwald Orchestra will open a new colleges and universities, of- and the aching lasts about wrote for the now^ extinct season jn j^s symphonic and
choral series this Sunday evening at 8:30 in Bovard Auditorium.
General admission for the concert will be $2. Students will be admitted for half price and may buy their tickets at the door.
Grad Student Gives Views In Magazine
The various meanings
Signals to Serve Immediate Needs
The Los Angeles City Council yesterday voted to delay its hearing on the proposed closing off of Hoover Boulevard pending a study by the city engineer on the rerouting of diverted traffic.
However, two traffic lights will be installed on
ANTHONY VAZZANA
. . . first symphony
MusicaletoOpen Symphony Year
which have been ascribed to Hoover Boulevard as an in-the concept of religion are terim measure, discussed in an article by a, Dr. Carl Franklin, vice-recent USC Law School grad- president in charge of finan-uate in the current issue of cial affairs, said the council the Southern California Law voted 8 to 5 to wait to dis-Review, published this week, j cuss closure until the city en-Ferdinand F. Fernandez gineers had submitted a de-suggests in his article a defi- finite plan for traffic diver-nition which is intended to sion. guarantee a liberal view Introduced j The School of Engineering
without including beliefs The motion was intro- jwiU hold its annual institute which are not religious m any duced by Councilman E. L. for high teachers of
proper sense. Timberlake almost immedi- engineering and related sub-
In the same issue of the,ately and the actual closing -ject3 at q.qo a m ;n iot vh publication the recently en- of the street was not dis-j3^
acted California obscenity cussed.” Dr. Franklin said. -.h . ?.
, . ., m. , • . , with a social gathering fol-
statute is examined in the The continuance was voted lowecus from the Un1’
is no longer functioning prop- v ersiti ° 0 lca£0, erly>.. -U__Kansas Study
said the chemist.
Rules Fail
“The rules fail to take into account the fact that how
and did a column on campus politics and other affairs for the Daily Trojan under the byline of Howard Lindhoffer.
“It seemed the safest way to do the kind of material I was doing.” he said. “If anyone was going to be hung in effigy, it wasn't going to be Buchwald.”
He also wrote the book for USC's 1948 varsity show entitled “No Love Atoll.”
All 10 a.m. classes will be
The evening's program will
Dr. Scott studied at +he
University of Kansas from
1912 to 1914, then completed
his AB degree requirements well a man functions these at stanford in 1916
days is no longer necessarily He was at the University
relative to the age of 65, he of California in Berkeley as
explained. a graduate student and grad-; dismissed Tuesday.
“In my case, I am in good Uate assistant. After Berke-health; I hate inactivity; I ley he spent nine months in love teaching and teachers of the army during World War I inorganic chemistry are need-1 After he recovered from an #
ed. I shall continue to teach attack of typhoid, he accept- ^ ^ | ^ p 4-
as long as I can. It's become; ed, the suggestion of his mis- I IO I I w I IJ Q I Q I II w
a sort of personal crusade sionary uncle and took a
against the system, Dr. Scott chemical position in the pre- USC students in the root-] Each day begins with a de-
is a book “obscene?” and Dr. Franklin that the City:p. .__, „ T____ „ ,
, , . n . . >i , ^ I. .i Ur. Alfred L. Ins^BrsolI, d63.ii
when is a book-seller crimm- Council act favorably on the . , h , f
Following the overture will ally liable for selling an “ob- previous recommendations of . 8111 e .
be the premier performance scene” book? the City Council traffic and ^he program will also in-
of a new symphony by Anth- Jn thg “Summary Judr Robb said four units- there be less
ition thev have had, Mrs. Wolf LAS associate dean, said yes- „ ' ' \ . students interested who can
explained. terday. Students sa.d the lack of m ,nto the!r program But it
The cost of the course will Speaking at a student-fac-